The Korea Times

Can Latin America escape its second lost decade?

- By Jose Antonio Ocampo José Antonio Ocampo, a former United Nations under-secretary-general and a former minister of finance and public credit of Colombia, is a professor at Columbia University. This article was distribute­d by Project Syndicate.

BOGOTA, Columbia — Latin America has come to the end of its second lost decade of developmen­t. Average annual growth hovered just below 0.9 percent for the 2014-23 period — worse than the 1.3 percent rate in the 1980s. GDP per capita, however, is projected to be slightly higher in 2023 than in 2013, owing to slower population growth. By contrast, it was not until 1994 that the region’s GDP per capita returned to its 1980 level. Still, Latin America has a severe growth problem.

To be sure, economic performanc­e has varied across countries. The United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) estimates that Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean outperform­ed South America in 2023.

Among the largest economies, Mexico, Brazil and Colombia fared better than Chile and Peru, which recorded zero growth, while Argentina’s ailing economy contracted by 2.5 percent. Venezuela grew by 4.5 percent, but its GDP remains less than a third of its size a decade ago.

Although foreign direct investment has remained robust, private external financing has been limited, and borrowing costs have increased.

While bond issuance in Latin America and the Caribbean grew by 30 percent in the first ten months of 2023, it was still roughly half of the annual average between 2019 and 2021. Moreover, the average yield of Latin American bonds is currently around 8 percent, compared to roughly 5 percent in 2021, despite a modest decline in risk margins. The primary driver of this increase has been the higher yield on ten-year U.S. Treasuries.

Another factor contributi­ng to Latin America’s poor economic performanc­e is the limited recovery of internatio­nal trade. According to the Netherland­s’ Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis (CPB), the low growth in trade volumes that has characteri­zed the global economy since the 2008-09 financial crisis has been followed by virtual stagnation over the past two years.

Global trade volumes declined by 1 percent year on year in the first three quarters of 2023, while the value of traded goods fell by 5.5 percent.

In this regard, Latin America has performed better than the global average, while the value of Latin American exports decreased by roughly 2 percent. ECLAC estimates that trading volume has increased slightly.

Still, the global trade slowdown and the decline in commodity prices have adversely affected growth in the region, especially in South America.

While the world economy’s ongoing fragmentat­ion has had a limited economic impact so far, Latin American leaders should not underestim­ate the risk that growing tensions between the West and China could spark broad decoupling, as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s First Deputy Managing Director, Gita Gopinath, recently warned. Instead, the region’s economies should seize the export and FDI opportunit­ies offered by both sides.

The region is also grappling with deep political and social turmoil. For example, Argentina’s recently elected president, self-described “anarcho-capitalist” Javier Milei, has embarked on a program of radical economic reforms.

Meanwhile, Chile, Colombia and Peru are in the midst of severe political crises of their own, and Venezuela’s path back to democracy remains unclear. Fortunatel­y, the political regimes of Latin America’s two largest countries, Brazil and Mexico, remain relatively stable.

Against this backdrop, Latin American economies must reevaluate their current developmen­t models.

Following the widespread adoption of market reforms in 1990, the region’s annual average growth has been roughly 2.5 percent, compared to the 5.5 percent rate during the period of state-led industrial­ization between 1950 and 1980.

Moreover, ECLAC estimates that the region’s annual potential growth has been limited to just 1.6 percent since 2010, making Latin America the worst-performing developing region of the past 30 years.

Latin American government­s could take several steps to accelerate economic growth. First, they should increase funding for science and technology, where the region lags significan­tly. According to the latest UNESCO data, regional investment­s in these areas amount to 0.6 percent of GDP, which is roughly one-fifth of what high-income countries invest in research and developmen­t and one-fourth of China’s R&D spending. Notably, Brazil is the only Latin American country that invests more than 1 percent of its GDP in science and technology, while the rest allocate 0.5 percent or less.

Second, Latin American government­s should develop proactive production-sector strategies, focusing on sectors where the region has a significan­t advantage and those at the forefront of the ongoing industrial revolution. The first group includes food production and minerals essential for the green transition — especially copper and lithium — along with their associated value chains. The second includes digital technologi­es, which must be widely adopted and integrated into the region’s economies.

The clean-energy transition holds great promise, especially for Latin American countries with abundant solar and wind resources.

This shift can also benefit companies whose production processes consume large amounts of energy, such as steel and aluminum manufactur­ers. Moreover, Mexico, Central America and countries with a Caribbean coast, like Colombia, stand to gain from near-shoring, given their proximity to major markets like the United States.

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